Talented
['tæləntɪd]
Definition
(a.) Furnished with talents; possessing skill or talent; mentally gifted.
Editor: Stanton
Synonyms and Synonymous
a. Gifted, of talent, of brilliant parts.
Checked by Eugene
Examples
- Some engineers have been tempted to call him a lucky amateur, a talented artist who happened to become interested in new methods of navigation. Rupert S. Holland. Historic Inventions.
- Are you educated and he ignorant, you high and he low, you refined and he coarse, you talented and he simple? Harriet Beecher Stowe. Uncle Tom's Cabin.
- I know they would be clever, for you are a talented creature! Charlotte Bronte. Jane Eyre.
- I saw in the Sandwich Islands, once, a picture copied by a talented German artist from an engraving in one of the American illustrated papers. Mark Twain. The Innocents Abroad.
- Sims, a talented draughtsman and designer who had been engaged in locomotive construction and in the engineering department of the United States Navy. Frank Lewis Dyer. Edison, His Life and Inventions.
- His closest friends were two highly talented brothers, Faizi and Abul Fazl, the sons of a learned free-thinker. H. G. Wells. The Outline of History_Being a Plain History of Life and Mankind.
- She had been married to a bright and talented young mulatto man, who was a slave on a neighboring estate, and bore the name of George Harris. Harriet Beecher Stowe. Uncle Tom's Cabin.
- He is talented, and venturous, and resolute. Charlotte Bronte. Shirley.
Checked by Eugene